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John Ortberg is a teaching pastor
at Menlo Park Presbyterian Church in Menlo Park. He is the best-selling
author of Everybody's Normal Till You Get to Know Them, If You Want to
walk on Water, You've Got to Get Out of the Boat, Love Beyond Reason,
and Old Testament Challenge. He has written for Christianity Today and
is a frequent contributor to Leadership Journal.
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The Life You've Always Wanted |
| With a new chapter and study guide
questions, this expanded edition presents readers with what it means to
live as Jesus would on a day-to-day basis--one filled with new meaning,
hope, change, and a joyous, growing closeness to Christ. This book is
an amazing read that anyone who desires a more genuine relationship with
Christ must have, period. Ortberg is one of the best communicators when
it comes to revealing the potency of spiritual disciplines or
discipleship activities and why they can help us so much.
This book is very well written and has a surprisingly nice flow from
chapter to chapter despite the book being broken up into segmented
sermons, more or less (which is by no means a bad thing). |
From the Back Cover
You Can Live a Deeper, More Spiritual Life Right Where You Are.
An expanded edition with a new chapter on prayer and discussion questions
The heart of Christianity is transformation—a relationship with God that impacts
not just our “spiritual lives,” but every aspect of living. John Ortberg calls
readers back to the dynamic heartbeat of Christianity—God’s power to bring
change and growth—and reveals both the how and why of transformation.
With a new chapter on prayer and added discussion questions, this expanded
edition of The Life You’ve Always Wanted offers modern perspectives on the
ancient path of the spiritual disciplines. But this is more than just a book
about things to do to be a good Christian. It’s a road map toward true
transformation that starts not with the individual but with the object of the
journey—Jesus Christ.
As with a marathon runner, the secret to winning the race lies not in trying
harder, but in training consistently—training with the spiritual disciplines.
The disciplines are neither taskmasters nor an end in themselves. Rather they
are exercises that build strength and endurance for the road of growth. The
fruit of the Spirit—joy, peace, kindness, etc.—are the signposts along the way.
Paved with humor and sparkling anecdotes, The Life You’ve Always Wanted is an
encouraging and challenging approach to a Christian life that’s worth living—a
life on the edge that fills an ordinary world with new meaning, hope, change,
and joy.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
“We Shall Morph Indeed”
The Hope of Transformation
Now, with God’s help, I shall become myself.
SØREN KIERKEGAARD
I could not quiet that pearly ache in my heart that I diagnosed as the cry of
home.
PAT CONROY
I am disappointed with myself. I am disappointed not so much with particular
things I have done as with aspects of who I have become. I have a nagging sense
that all is not as it should be.
Some of this disappointment is trivial. I wouldn’t have minded getting a more
muscular physique. I can’t do basic home repairs. So far I haven’t shown much
financial wizardry.
Some of this disappointment is neurotic. Sometimes I am too concerned about what
others think of me, even people I don’t know. Some of this disappointment, I
know, is worse than trivial; it is simply the sour fruit of self-absorption. I
attend a high school reunion and can’t choke back the desire to stand out by
looking more attractive or having achieved more impressive accomplishments than
my classmates. I speak to someone with whom I want to be charming, and my words
come out awkward and pedestrian. I am disappointed in my ordinariness. I want to
be, in the words of Garrison Keillor, named “Sun-God, King of America, Idol of
Millions, Bringer of Fire, The Great Haji, Thun-Dar the Boy Giant.”
But some of this disappointment in myself runs deeper. When I look in on my
children as they sleep at night, I think of the kind of father I want to be. I
want to create moments of magic, I want them to remember laughing until the
tears flow, I want to read to them and make the books come alive so they love to
read, I want to have slow, sweet talks with them as they’re getting ready to
close their eyes, I want to sing them awake in the morning. I want to chase
fireflies with them, teach them to play tennis, have food fights, and hold them
and pray for them in a way that makes them feel cherished.
I look in on them as they sleep at night, and I remember how the day really
went: I remember how they were trapped in a fight over checkers and I walked out
of the room because I didn’t want to spend the energy needed to teach them how
to resolve conflict. I remember how my daughter spilled cherry punch at dinner
and I yelled at her about being careful as if she’d revealed some deep character
flaw; I yelled at her even though I spill things all the time and no one yells
at me; I yelled at her—to tell the truth—simply because I’m big and she’s little
and I can get away with it. And then I saw that look of hurt and confusion in
her eyes, and I knew there was a tiny wound on her heart that I had put there,
and I wished I could have taken those sixty seconds back. I remember how at
night I didn’t have slow, sweet talks, but merely rushed the children to bed so
I could have more time to myself. I’m disappointed.
And it’s not just my life as a father. I am disappointed also for my life as a
husband, friend, neighbor, and human being in general. I think of the day I was
born, when I carried the gift of promise, the gift given to all babies. I think
of that little baby and what might have been: the ways I might have developed
mind and body and spirit, the thoughts I might have had, the joy I might have
created.
I am disappointed that I still love God so little and sin so much. I always had
the idea as a child that adults were pretty much the people they wanted to be.
Yet the truth is, I am embarrassingly sinful. I am capable of dismaying amounts
of jealousy if someone succeeds more visibly than I do. I am disappointed at my
capacity to be small and petty. I cannot pray for very long without my mind
drifting into a fantasy of angry revenge over some past slight I thought I had
long since forgiven or some grandiose fantasy of achievement. I can convince
people I’m busy and productive and yet waste large amounts of time watching
television.
These are just some of the disappointments. I have other ones, darker ones, that
I’m not ready to commit to paper. The truth is, even to write these words is a
little misleading, because it makes me sound more sensitive to my fallenness
than I really am. Sometimes, although I am aware of how far I fall short, it
doesn’t even bother me very much. And I am disappointed at my lack of
disappointment. Where does this disappointment come from? A common answer in our
day is that it is a lack of self-esteem, a failure to accept oneself. That may
be part of the answer, but it is not the whole of it, not by a long shot. The
older and wiser answer is that the feeling of disappointment is not the problem,
but a reflection of a deeper problem—my failure to be the person God had in mind
when he created me. It is the “pearly ache” in my heart to be at home with the
Father.
Universal Disappointment
One of the most profound statements I have heard about the human condition was
one I first encountered when I was only five years old. It was spoken by my
hero, Popeye the Sailor Man. When he was frustrated or wasn’t sure what to do or
felt inadequate, Popeye would simply say, “I yam what I yam.”
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